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History 323 Middle Ages

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Title: History 323 Middle Ages


1
History 323Middle Ages
  • 9th Century Invasions Saracens, Magyars, and
    Vikings

2
Europe Emerges
  • While the Carolingian period can be considered
    part of Late Antiquity (marked by the continuing
    influence of Roman civilization), a distinctive
    Europe emerges as 9th and 10th century invasions
    disrupt Carolingian institutions and medieval
    Europe begins to take on its unique political and
    cultural characteristics
  • For the first half of this course, we have been
    concerned with the legacy of Rome and the
    character of barbarian societies in Western
    Europe (200 A.D. to 800 A.D.)
  • For the rest of the course, we will be studying
    Europe in the Central Middle Ages (800 1300).
    During this period, Europe is invaded by
    outsiders (Arabs, Magyars, and Vikings), national
    governments develop, the Roman Catholic Church
    gains momentum, the Crusades are launched,
    powerful cities emerge and fuel economic growth,
    and distinctive universities are founded

3
Invasions of Arabs, Magyars, and Vikings in the
9th and 10th centuries
4
Islamic Civilization
  • Who is the founder of the Islamic religion?
  • Islam began c. 610 A.D. when Muhammad, a merchant
    from Mecca (modern Saudi Arabia) had a vision
  • The angel Gabriel spoke to him and said
    Readread in the name of thy Lord who creates
    man from a clot
  • This is the first of many messages from God that
    Muhammad received for his contemplation. They
    form the Quran, which in Arabic means reading
    or recitation
  • The Quran is considered by Muslims to be a book
    of divine revelation

Man with Arabic text, pen and ink, Iran
5
Early Islam
  • Muhammad began to preach in Mecca, telling the
    people to give up their idols and submit to the
    one and indivisible God
  • This message was unpopular among the leaders of
    Mecca, whose prosperity was tied to guardianship
    of the Kaba, a polytheistic sanctuary
  • Muhammad moved to Medina, and his followers grew
  • Muhammad became involved with political, legal,
    and military issues. The parts of the Quran
    written in Medina therefore concerned with
    practical problems of living together in community

Arabia, including Mecca and Medina
6
Early Islam
See Peters, Chapter 5, for more about the early
history of Islam and Arabia!
  • The house of the Prophet in Medina was the first
    communal gathering place for prayer, and it
    served as a prototype for the earliest mosques
  • In congregation the act of prayer, which is
    intended to create a sense of unity and cohesion,
    is led by a prayer leader. The first of these
    prayer leaders was Muhammad
  • Later, Muhammad returned to Mecca, and one of his
    first acts was to cleanse the Kaba of its idols
    and to rededicate the shrine to Allah. It has
    remained important for Muslims ever since

Arabia, including Mecca and Medina
7
The Quran (Koran)
  • The two foundations of Muslim faith are God's
    revelations to Muhammad, known as the Quran, and
    reports about Muhammad's life and deeds, known as
    the hadith
  • The central miracle of Islam is God's revelation
    to Muhammad, whose human fallibilities as a mere
    mortal are repeatedly mentioned in the Quran
  • The revelations that comprise the Quran were
    revealed over a period of more than two decades
    in two places
  • The first revelations from the period of
    Muhammad's residence in Mecca are short and
    incantatory verses of extraordinary poetic beauty
  • The later revelations from the period after
    Muhammad immigrated to Medina are longer,
    legalistic texts appropriate to a developing
    community of believers in need of rules and
    regulations

8
The Quran
  • The Quran is comparable in length to the
    Christian Gospels. It contains 114 Arabic
    chapters (suras) of varying length. The opening
    sura is called the Fatiha, a short prayer or
    invocation for many situations
  • In the Name of God, the Merciful, the
    Compassionate
  • Praise belongs to God, Lord of all Being
  • the All-merciful, the All-compassionate
  • the Master of the Day of Doom
  • Thee only we serve to Thee alone we pray for
    succor
  • Guide us in the straight path
  • the path of those whom Thou hast blessed,
  • not of those against whom Thou art wrathfulnor
    of those who are astray.

An ancient Quran, Islamic Museum, Cairo
9
The Quran, Hadith, and Art
  • The Quran is the cornerstone of Muslim faith,
    practice, and law
  • It provides guidelines for social welfare, family
    and inheritance laws, and proper behavior within
    the framework of a just and equitable society
  • The Quran does not speak against the creation of
    figural images, only the making of idols
  • Restrictions on figurative arts are, however,
    found in another body of literature known as
    Hadith, or "tradition
  • Hadith includes accounts of the sayings, deeds,
    and thoughts of the Prophet and is superseded in
    importance only by the Quran

A page of the Quran from 10th century Tunisia
(blue parchment with gold lettering)
10
Islamic Artwork and Illustration
Early Muslim Vase with Quran writings
Illustrated manuscript, Iraq
11
Doctrine Five Pillars of Islam
  • The creed belief (Iman) in God, his angels, his
    books, his prophets, and the last judgment. Core
    statement There is no God but God and Muhammad
    is the Prophet of God. If you can say this, you
    can be regarded as a minimalist Muslim
  • Prayer or worship (Salat) five times a day
    (rising, early afternoon, late afternoon, sunset,
    and before bed). Friday prayers as a group.
    Prayer symbolizes humility of men and women in
    the presence of God
  • Fasting (Sawm) during daylight hours during the
    month of Ramadanfasting from eating, drinking,
    smoking, and sex. This is a time of discipline
    like Christian Lent encourages a focus on God
    and unity in the community
  • Giving of alms (Zakat)a Muslim should give
    1/40th of his revenue per year in cash or kind to
    the poor or those striving in the way of God
  • Pilgrimage (Hajj)A trip once in a lifetime to
    Mecca, if a person is physically able. Only
    Muslims can participate. Ritual acts recall
    great events in early Hebrew and Islamic history

12
The Expansion of Islam
  • Although Muhammad died in 632, Islam became a
    motivating force in the formation and conversion
    of Arabia and much of Palestine (634)
  • By the 640s, Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Egypt were
    unified by the Muslim religion and government
  • By 711, Islam had spread into central Asia,
    India, North Africa, Spain
  • The Byzantine Empire stopped the expansion at
    Constantinople in 717-718, and would battle
    Muslims until the 15th century
  • European expansion of Islam stopped in 732
    (Poitiers, France, Charles Martel) but Spain
    remained partly Muslim until 1492
  • Islamic leaders called Caliphs in this early
    period
  • Various dynasties arose that controlled different
    geographic regions, so the Islamic world was
    rarely united
  • Arabic remained the only accepted language of
    religious expression in Islam, and even to this
    day the Quran cannot be translated if it is to
    be used for religious purposes

13
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14
Arab Invasions during Carolingian Period
  • During the 9th century, Arab sea power had grown
    stronger, and from bases in North Africa, Spain,
    and Southern Gaul, they attacked Europe
  • By 830 A.D., Sicily had fallen to Arab raiders
  • As the 9th century wore on, Carolingian defenses
    in Southern Europe were badly damaged by Arab
    invasions
  • For the next century, Muslim scholarship and
    science will excel anything in Western Europe

15
Magyar Invasions
  • In eastern Europe, a new invader proved even more
    troublesome than the Arabs for 9th and 10th
    century Europeans
  • The Magyar were a Finno-Ugrian people from the
    steppes of western Asia (their later name,
    Hungarians, derives from the name of one group of
    the Magyar, the Onogurs)
  • In 896, the Byzantines persuaded the Magyar to
    attack the Bulgars. But they subsequently invaded
    Western Europe using cavalry. Their raids
    disrupted the Eastern Franks in Italy, Germany,
    and France
  • 898-920 A.D. were the toughest years for invasions

16
Magyar Invasions
  • The Saxon kings of East Francia, Henry I (r.
    916-936) and Otto I (r. 936-973) slowly turned
    back the Magyars. In 955 the Magyars were
    defeated significantly at the Battle of the Lech
    River (Austria).
  • Otto I led a dynasty called the Ottonians who
    ruled Germany after the fading of Carolingian and
    Magyar power. The Magyar gradually became
    farmers or moved East.

Seal with image of Otto the Great, who was
crowned emperor in 962 in Rome
17
Viking Invasions
  • The Vikings were the most influential invading
    group, raiding Western Europe in the 8th, 9th,
    and 10th centuries
  • The Vikings were bands of Scandinavian warriors
    who sailed south in their long wooden ships in
    the summer, looted and pillaged along the coasts
    and river valleys, and sailed home in Autumn
  • Vikings took advantage of weakening central
    governments and poor local resistance
  • Norwegians chiefly attacked Ireland and Western
    Britain Swedes the Eastern Baltic and Russia
    The Danes, Eastern England, Frisia, and the
    Rhineland
  • The Vikings also founded colonies in Greenland,
    Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and (briefly) in
    North America

18
Viking Invasions
  • In 865, the famous Great Army landed in England
    and stayed
  • By 878, a substantial part of NE England had
    falled under Dainish rule, and was known for
    centuries as the Danelaw
  • The last Viking King of Northumbria was Eric
    Bloodaxe (d. 954)
  • Canute, a Viking King, was ruler of England,
    Denmark, and Norway from 1016-1035
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